London has been battered by 50mph winds that have felled trees and caused travel chaos. Powerful gusts swept across the capital as the Met Office issued a yellow "be aware" weather alert for most of the country.

Ferguson urges players to be role models

Sir Alex Ferguson has warned that players have a responsibility to act as role models for youngsters after diving and dissent were the key topics at a meeting of league managers.

The Manchester United boss said the two issues were the key topics in the first Castrol/LMA European managers and head coaches forum held at the national football centre at St George's Park. The managers also had a presentation on the likely impact of UEFA's financial fair play measures, but it was discussions on player behaviour that Ferguson highlighted.

The Scot, who has previously criticised Liverpool's Luis Suarez for "diving all over the place", said: "One thing that impacts is your players' behaviour in terms of simulation, dissent, because it's an important issue because you have to be a model for young people."

He continued: "Young kids growing up, playing under-7 football, under-8 football and we have to have a responsibility in terms of the future of the game that way."

The managers were also given a presentation on goal-line technology by referees' chief Mike Riley but Ferguson said football should be wary of going down a route that would see the game suffer interruptions.

He added: "You've got to be careful with how far you go with technology. I think that the basic progress we have to see is the goal-line technology.

"That's a simple one-off situation and it was explained by Mike that it can be done very quickly.

"But because we are a winter game, unfortunately, it means then that you don't want to have supporters sitting there, inactive in terms of their involvement watching the game, waiting for a decision, whether it's by an assistant or someone looking at a television screen.

"That has got to be 'puff' [claps hands] decision taken and move on.

"It could happen maybe three, four times in a game you see. So, you don't want two minutes, three minutes each time the game's stopped. People could go to a game at 8 o'clock on a Wednesday night and maybe not get home till midnight."